Bioinspired Liquid Crystalline Spinning Enables Scalable Fabrication of High-Performing Fibrous Artificial Muscles.
Wenhao HouJiao WangJiu-An LvPublished in: Advanced materials (Deerfield Beach, Fla.) (2023)
Leveraging liquid crystal elastomers (LCEs) to realize scalable fabrication of high-performing fibrous artificial muscles is of particular interest because these active soft materials can provide large, reversible, programmable deformations upon environmental stimuli. High-performing fibrous LCEs require the used processing technology to enable shaping LCEs into micro-scale fine fibers as thin as possible while achieving macroscopic LC orientation, which however remains a daunting challenge. Here, we report a bioinspired spinning technology that allows for continuous, high-speed production (fabrication speed up to 8400 m/h) of thin and aligned LCE microfibers combined with rapid deformation (actuation strain rate up to 810% s -1 ), powerful actuation (actuation stress up to 5.3 MPa), high response frequency (50 Hz), and long cycle life (250000 cycles without obvious fatigue). Inspired by liquid crystalline spinning of spiders that take advantage of multiple drawdowns to thin and align their dragline silks, we employed internal drawdown via tapered-wall-induced-shearing and external drawdown via mechanical stretching to shape LCEs into long, thin, aligned microfibers with the desirable actuation performances, which few processing technologies can achieve. This bioinspired processing technology capable of scalable production of high-performing fibrous LCEs would benefit the development of smart fabrics, intelligent wearable devices, humanoid robotics, and other areas. This article is protected by copyright. All rights reserved.